The Toulouse is a French breed of large domestic goose, originally from the area of Toulouse in south-western France. Two types are recognised: a heavy industrial type with dewlaps, the French: Oie de Toulouse à bavette;[7] and a slightly lighter agricultural type without dewlaps, the French: Oie de Toulouse sans bavette.[6] Both types are large, with weights of up to 9 kg.[11] Birds bred in the United Kingdom and United States exclusively for showing may be still larger, and have a somewhat different conformation.[12]: 378
History
The history of the Toulouse is a long one, going back at least to 1555.[4]: 472 It was reared for meat and for foie gras.[12]: 378
Some of these heavier British birds were later exported to North America.[12]: 378 The Toulouse was included in the first Standard of Perfection of the American Poultry Association in 1874. It is reared principally in the upper Midwest, where its good tolerance of cold weather is an advantage.[4]: 472
Characteristics
The Toulouse generally has a placid disposition.[13] Ring size is 27 mm for both ganders and geese.[14] In France weights are usually in the range 7–9 kg. The British standard calls for an average weight of about 10 kg for geese, and nearly 13 kg for ganders.[12]: 379
Use
The production strain of the Toulouse goose was bred to be fast-growing, gaining weight rapidly when there is an abundance of food and no room for exercise.[15] It may be reared for its meat, for goose fat, or for foie gras.[4]: 472 Exhibition strains are slow-growing.[13] Geese of the type without dewlaps lay 25–40 extra-large white eggs per year, while geese of the dewlap type lay 20–35.[5] The birds may also be a source of goose down.[4]: 472
^Geese watchlist. Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Archived 5 December 2021.
^Geese. Poultry Club of Great Britain. Archived 9 November 2018.
^ abcdeJanet Vorwald Dohner (2001). The Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds. New Haven, Connecticut; London: Yale University Press. ISBN0300088809.
^ abcToulouse Goose. The Livestock Conservancy. Accessed February 2016.
^Jacquie Jacob, Tony Pescatore (2013). Selecting Geese. Lexington, Kentucky: University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. Archived 3 May 2017.
Further reading
Joseph Batty (1996). Domesticated Ducks and Geese, third edition. Elsted, Midhurst: Beech Publishing House. ISBN9781857360912.